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Dionne Swift

Dionne Swift square photo image for Bio

About Dionne

Dionne paints with stitches to create dynamic, vibrantly coloured textiles. Her needle becomes her pen and thread her ink. The scale, emotion, and energy of her landscapes are inspirational.

Dionne is a graduate of Goldsmith’s College, London University. She has a Masters in Textiles from UCE. And she has been recognised by the industry for her incredible work, e.g. Shortlisted Finalist in the Fine Art Textiles Award at The Festival of Quilts 2020.

Now based between Yorkshire [UK] and Abruzzo [Italy], she exhibits and tutors internationally.

​You can watch Dionne demonstrate how to use free motion embroidery to create a range of patterns, textures, tones, and shades in an episode of The Makers Studio series, brought to you by Janome and justhands-on.tv.

Click here to watch Dionne Swift in The Makers Studio.

www.dionneswift.com

Signature Technique

Painting with stitches

Top Tips

  • Use a vibrant mix of thread weights, colours, and styles to build up a more dynamic texture.
  • A machine with an extra wide throat makes it easier to manipulate your piece.
  • Cover your hoop with fabric to give it more grip. You need the fabric to stay drum like as you manoeuvre it.
  • Drawing your subject first, with pencil on paper, can help improve your observation and knowledge of your subject – try not to work from a photograph.
  • Practice by stitching your signature to get started. Your muscle memory will help you.
  • Think of painting with stitches as an orchestra with the sewing machine, threads, fabric, hoop, and you (!) coming together to work as one.
  • Don’t be afraid of the machine. After a few hours of speed sewing it becomes second nature.
  • Try not to have a set image of the outcome. You are not stitching an exact replica. The result is where you get to. There is no wrong in there. Enjoy the journey.

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Patterns

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Posts

How do I avoid having a birds nest on the back of my quilt?

A birds nest is that ravel of thead that often happens when you start quilting part way into a project and when you are making  a quilt you need the back of it to be as beautiful as the front.   An easy way to do this is to pull that bottom thread up through the work so that you have it under control and then you can knot it off later.

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What do you do with the thread ends when you are finished quilting?

Well the threads can be knotted and then hidden in the wadding.  You can see how by watching Knotting Off Your Threads and here is what one happy viewer had to say:   I have just watched 'Knotting Off Your Threads' with Valerie and would like to say thank you for sharing such a great method. I was taking both threads to the back, tying them off and then weaving in the ends which seemed to take longer than the actual quilting!

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What wadding should I use?

Question from Janice: Hello again, well I've finished the topping for my log cabin quilt and now am about to sandwhich it together.  I have Heirloom cotton batting and good old fashioned polyester batting.  Having been slightly put of by the instructions on the heirloom batting, although that was my original choice, can you tell me - do I really need to rinse in tepid water & dry as recommended on the packaging for shrinkage or can I just apply it as it comes after opening & flattened overnight.
I have never used this type but heard Jennie say on C&C it was fabulous so ofcourse I bought it.

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2022-03-17T13:27:57+00:00
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